subject
English, 11.11.2020 04:40 himatasy

Which of the following inferences is best supported by Elizabeth’s description of Abigail? Proctor: It's winter in here yet. On Sunday, let you come with me, and we'll walk the farm together. I never see such a load of flowers on the earth. [With good feeling he goes and looks up at the sky through the open doorway.] Lilacs have a purple smell. Lilac is
the smell of nightfall, I think. Massachusetts is a beauty in the spring!

Elizabeth: Aye, it is.

[There is a pause. She is watching him from the table as he stands there absorbing the night. It is as though she would speak but cannot. Instead, now, she takes up his plate and glass and fork and goes with them to the basin. Her back is turned to him. He turns to her and watches her. A sense of their separation rises.]

Proctor: I think you're sad again. Are you?

Elizabeth: [She does'Lt want friction, and yet she must:] You come so late I thought you'd gone to Salem this afternoon.

Proctor: Why? I have no business in Salem.

Elizabeth: You did speak of going, earlier this week.

Proctor: [He knows what she means] I thought better of it since.

Elizabeth: Mary Warren's there today.

Proctor: Why'd you let her? You heard me forbid her go to Salem any morel

Elizabeth: I couldn't stop her.

Proctor: [Holding back a full condemnation of her] It is a fault, it is a fault, Elizabeth -- you're the mistress here, not Mary Warren.

Elizabeth: She frightened all my strength away.

Proctor: How may that mouse frighten you, Elizabeth? You--

Elizabeth: It is a mouse no more. I forbid her go, and she raises up her chin like the daughter of a prince and says to me, "I must go to Salem, Goody Proctor. I am an official of the court!"

Proctor: Court! What court?

Elizabeth: Aye, it is a proper court they have now. They've sent four judges out of Boston, she says, weighty magistrates of the General Court, and at the head sits the Deputy Governor of the province.

Proctor: [Astonished] Why, she's mad.

Elizabeth: I would to God she were. There be fourteen people in the jail now, she says. [Proctor simply looks at her, unable to grasp it. ] And they'll be tried, and the court have power to hang them too, she says.

Proctor: [Scoffing, but without conviction] Ah, they'd never hang --

Elizabeth: The Deputy Governor promise hangin' if they'll not confess, John. The town's gone wild, I think. She speak of Abigail, and I thought she were a saint, to hear her. Abigail brings the other girls into the court, and where she walks, the crowd will part like the sea for Israel. And folks are brought before them, and if they scream and howl and fall to the floor -- the person's clapped in the jail for
bewitchin' them.

Proctor: [wide-eyed] Oh, it is a black mischief.

Elizabeth: I think you must go to Salem, John. He turns to her. I think so. You must tell them it is a fraud.

Proctor: [thinking beyond this] Aye, it is; it is surely.
Answer choices:

A. Abigail has gained tremendous power in Salem through her accusations.

B. Abigail’s ability to perform miracles has resulted in her developing a large following.

C. Elizabeth is jealous of Abigail’s status within the community.

D. Abigail and Elizabeth have grown close over the course of the play.

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on English

question
English, 21.06.2019 20:20
Fitzgerald describes eleanor as being amory’s last “weird” love woman mystery relationship
Answers: 1
question
English, 21.06.2019 23:00
In addition to academic and extracurricular achievements in school, i am an involved member of my community. i volunteer at the local animal shelter every saturday morning, and i build houses for a nonprofit organization a few times a year with my family. which of these rhetorical devices is most clearly used here? a. inductive logic b. ethos c. parallelism d. text structure
Answers: 1
question
English, 21.06.2019 23:30
Determine the meaning of the word *propel* using the context clues in the sentence. wind power is the ability to capture the wind in a way to *propel* the blades of wind turbines. a) to move slowly b) to urge onward c) to stop from moving d) to drive, or cause to move, forward
Answers: 1
question
English, 21.06.2019 23:50
Which phrase from the article suggests a tone that is formal but subjective? a- "thirty-six inches long and sixteen inches wide" b- "loads of fun with it" c- "most generous and attractive" d- "must be new subscribers" one of the most generous and attractive offers ever made to washington boys and girls is announced today by the washington times circulation department. for a limited time, national capital youngsters who show enterprise and energy will be given disc wheel coaster wagons in return for a few hours of their time. each boy or girl who sends in to the circulation manager, room 242, the names and addresses of ten friends or relatives who agree to take the washington times for six months, will receive one of these wagons, which can be made a source of profit as well as unending enjoyment for youngsters. the boys and girls are merely asked to obtain the signatures of ten friends or relatives. no money is to be collected and no work is required. the washington times is the most popular and constantly growing newspaper in the national capital and it is easy and simple to obtain the required ten signatures. as soon as the signatures are verified, the disc wheel coaster wagon will be delivered to the energetic boy or girl. the disc wheel coaster wagon is thirty-six inches long and sixteen inches wide. the coaster is built exactly like a high-powered automobile. the disc wheels have rubber tires and true roller bearings. it runs as smoothly as an eight-cylinder automobile. it is built of the strongest wood and is equipped with a reliable hand brake, enabling the owner to stop in an instant. the tongue—usually the first thing about a wagon to break and render the wagon unserviceable—is so stout that a man can jump on it without breaking it. it is built for real boys and active girls and they are bound to have loads of fun with it. besides using the wagon for pleasure and going visiting, boys and girls can use it to make money, running—or riding—errands, delivering packages, wheeling marketing home, etc. the disc wheel coaster wagon is so strongly built that it will withstand the roughest usage to which it may be subjected and will last for years. every boy and girl who wants one of the attractive and most desirable disc wheel coaster wagons should start today to sign up the necessary ten relatives or friends as home delivery subscribers for the washington times for six months. bear in mind that the ten persons whose signatures you obtain must be new subscribers—that is, they must be persons who are not having the washington times delivered at their homes at present. here’s hoping every boy and girl in washington gets a disc wheel coaster wagon before many days.
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Which of the following inferences is best supported by Elizabeth’s description of Abigail? Proctor:...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 10.12.2020 19:40
question
Mathematics, 10.12.2020 19:40
question
Mathematics, 10.12.2020 19:40
question
History, 10.12.2020 19:40
question
Chemistry, 10.12.2020 19:40
question
Mathematics, 10.12.2020 19:40